SPIEGEL ONLINE - February 12, 2008, 01:13 PM 
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,534704,00.html 


MUHAMMAD CARICATURE FALLOUT


Denmark Busts Alleged Plot to Kill Cartoonists


Pre-dawn police raids in Denmark have netted five people suspected of
involvement in a plot to kill a cartoonist whose depiction of the Prophet
Muhammad helped spark international violence two years ago.

 Many Muslims, as seen here in Pakistan in 2006, were not pleased about the
Muhammad cartoons. <http://www.spiegel.de/img/0,1020,1082668,00.jpg> 
AP

Many Muslims, as seen here in Pakistan in 2006, were not pleased about the
Muhammad cartoons.

Danish police conducted a series of pre-dawn raids Tuesday morning and
arrested several individuals suspected of planning to murder one of the 12
cartoonists whose unflattering depictions of the Prophet Muhammad led to
worldwide protests in 2006. 

Those arrested include several "people with a Muslim background" with both
Danish and foreign citizenship, according to the Danish newspaper
Jyllands-Posten, which originally published the caricatures in the autumn of
2005. The paper reports that cartoonist Kurt Westergaard was the target of
the plot and that Danish authorities have been investigating the threat for
some time.

Westergaard's cartoon depicted the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb in his
turban, complete with a lit fuse. It was one of the most offensive of the
drawings that ultimately resulted in violence and protests in a number of
predominantly Muslim countries, much of it targeting Danish embassies and
products. At least 50 people died in the rioting.

The raids and arrests were conducted in Aarhus, located in western Denmark.
The Associated Press quotes PET, the police intelligence agency, as saying
that the raids were meant "to prevent a terror-related murder" and to do so
"at an early phase to stop the planning and the carrying out of murder."
According to Danish broadcaster DR, police took five people into custody.

 
The police did not mention either the number of arrests made or the
suspected targets. Carsten Juste, editor-in-chief of Jyllands-Posten,
however, released a statement saying that the murder plans against Kurt
Westergaard were very "concrete." The cartoonist and his wife have been
living under police protection for the last three months as a result of the
plot. 

"Of course I fear for my life after the Danish Security and Intelligence
Service informed me of the concrete plans of certain people to kill me,"
Westergaard said in a statement printed in Jyllands-Posten. "However, I have
turned my fear into anger and indignation."

The murder plot is just one of a number of aftershocks reverberating from
the cartoon crisis. In November 2006, Jihad Hamad -- one of two men behind a
failed plot to explode suitcases packed with bombs on a German train -- said
in a television interview that the cartoons had prompted him to act. His
partner in the plot, Youssef Mohammed el-Hajdib, reiterated that claim in a
German court last week.

Denmark's National Library recently announced  plans to
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,532057,00.html> archive
the caricatures that sparked the violent protests.

jtw/ap



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